The chief executive officers of CBS Corp. and Viacom Inc. reportedly recently met about a possible merger of the two companies.

“Les Moonves of CBS and Bob Bakish from Viacom are talking as the two companies have made their requests for due diligence materials, the sources said. But the special committees of their boards have yet to meet,” CNBC’s David Faber reported.

Earlier this month, CBS and Viacom said they formed special committees to explore a merger, the first step in potentially reuniting the companies split by media mogul Sumner Redstone more than a decade ago.

In separate statements, each company said that there is no assurance that the process will result in a transaction, and they would not comment further until the process is completed, Reuters reported.

The companies had previously explored a merger in 2016 at the urging of ailing 94-year-old Sumner Redstone and his daughter Shari, who control CBS and Viacom through privately held National Amusements Inc.

Those talks failed due to concerns by CBS’ directors and Moonves over governance issues and the deal’s financial sense for CBS shareholders.

But Shari Redstone has continued to discuss with executives at both companies her desire to merge the two, which intensified after Walt Disney Co. announced in December it would buy a majority of Twenty-First Century Fox Inc.’s assets, sources have said.

CBS Chief Executive Leslie Moonves and Viacom CEO Bob Bakish held discussions in January about a potential deal. The boards of both companies decided on Thursday to begin a formal process to explore the deal through special committees.

The deal would pair CBS’s broadcast network, television studios and Showtime cable network with Viacom’s Paramount Pictures, Comedy Central, Nickelodeon and MTV. That could help CBS’ streaming service compete with Netflix Inc. and boost the combined company’s leverage with cable and satellite distributors.